Touch Imprint Cytology and Frozen-section Analysis for Intraoperative Evaluation of Sentinel Nodes in Early Breast Cancer

Sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) is currently the suggested axillary staging procedure in patients with early-stage breast cancer (BC) and usually requires intraoperative frozen-section (FS) examination of the removed nodes. However, other techniques, such as touch imprint cytology (IC), real-time...

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Published in:Anticancer research Vol. 32; no. 8; pp. 3523 - 3526
Main Authors: LUMACHI, Franco, MARINO, Filippo, ZANELLA, Simone, CHIARA, Giordano B, BASSO, Stefano M. M
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Attiki International Institute of Anticancer Research 01-08-2012
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Summary:Sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) is currently the suggested axillary staging procedure in patients with early-stage breast cancer (BC) and usually requires intraoperative frozen-section (FS) examination of the removed nodes. However, other techniques, such as touch imprint cytology (IC), real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction and rapid cytokeratin immunostaining on FS may be used. The aim of this preliminary study was to assess the usefulness of intraoperative IC and FS section analysis together in improving the accuracy of sentinel lymph node evaluation in patients with early BC, who underwent SLNB. A series of 126 consecutive women (median age 52, range 34-71 years) with T1 (≤20 mm) BC, were prospectively enrolled in the study. A total of 221 axillary nodes were processed for both IC and FS intraoperative evaluation. Final pathology revealed 74 out of 221 (33.5%) nodes with metastasis, out of which 51 (68.9%) had macrometastases. Overall, 31 out of 126 (24.6%) patients were staged as having pN1mi or pN1a. The sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy in detecting metastases were 75.7%, 100% and 91.9% for FS, 70.3%, 98.6% and 89.1% for IC, and 89.2%, 100% and 96.0% for IC+FS together, respectively. The sensitivity of FS and IC did not differ significantly (p=0.46), while the combination of FS+IC showed a higher sensitivity (p=0.03), and similar accuracy. Our preliminary data confirm that IC is a simple and rapid technique with good sensitivity, suggesting that the combination of FS and IC may be useful in all patients requiring intraoperative SLNB evaluation.
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ISSN:0250-7005
1791-7530